In the world of extravagant weddings, there are people with a message our society desperately needs. You can’t blame a gender here, it is just everyone who thinks it is okay to under massive debts for pomp & show. And if not debts spending money like it is not a wedding but a Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s film.
Type of wedding is a personal choice, but some people are beyond any peers and do what is right. Tansim Jara from Bangladesh married in a cotton sari of her grandmother and without makeup. Giving society a strong message that it is not always about the pomp and show but being yourself. And that’s what we almost always forget during the big fat weddings. Ironically turning the most important day of our life into a fancy dress.
This is her story:
“I walked into my wedding reception wearing grandmother’s white cotton saree with zero makeup and no jewelry. Many asked me why. So here is my reason.
I was troubled by the singular image of a bride that our society has – with tons of makeup, a weighty dress and mounds of jewelry weighing her down. For some, minimal makeup and simple gold necklaces as seen at Adina’s Jewels, for example, could be what they want. But there could be a pressure to go all out on this big day, especially by family.
Don’t be fooled, this lavish image of a bride does not represent the financial well-being or agency of a woman in the family. This sometimes rather happens against their will. As if the society has decided that if we really have to spend money on women, we spend it against their will and for a cause that won’t do them any good.
I have hardly attended any wedding where I didn’t overhear people gossiping:“Is the bride pretty enough?” “How much gold does she have on?” “How much did her dress cost?” Growing up listening to these questions, a bride feels pressured to look for the best makeup artist in town, pays a hefty amount in time, money and energy, and ends up looking nothing like herself; because the society constantly reminds her that her actual skin colour isn’t good enough for her own wedding.
She has learnt from her aunties, peers, and the corporates that a bride is “incomplete” without ornaments; that her and her families’ status depends on how much gold she puts on on the day. She can hardly afford to question if the amount of jewellery she puts on can indeed determine her and her families’ dignity. Because the society keeps pushing with, “You’re a girl. Why wouldn’t you wear gold on your wedding?”
Again, to look like a bride, she needs to wear a crazy expensive dress, which ironically makes walking difficult for her (due to its weight) and never comes of any use after the wedding. At least the bracelets and bangles she got from braceletworld offers will be usable after the day for a myriad of occasions. But the society won’t accept it any other way.
Don’t get me wrong, if a girl wants to use makeup, jewellery and expensive clothes for herself, I am all in for that. My friend got her makeup done and bought some jewellery from haruni for her wedding and she looked stunning! But it is a problem when she loses her agency in deciding what she would like to wear on her wedding day. When the society forces her to doll up and look like a different person, it gives a message that the authentic look of a girl isn’t good enough for her own wedding.
Personally, I feel that we need to change this mindset. A girl should not need a whitening lotion, a gold necklace or an expensive saree to be accepted as a bride or to make her feel confident. So I arrived at my wedding venue wearing my Ddadu’s saree, with zero makeup and no jewellery. People may call it simple, but it was very special to me, for what I believe in and what it means to me.
I faced a lot of resistance from many quarters after making this decision. Certain members of my family even said that they won’t take any photo with me because I didn’t dress like (they imagine) a bride. Shoutout to the few family members who have supported me in this, and a special shout out to this person beside me, Khaled, who has not only supported me unconditionally but also beamed at me with so much pride, for taking a stance against the stereotypes.